I blink.
I blink again.
I blink once more and make a split- second decision: lie. âYou have him confused with someone else, honey.â I cough. âDid you need help with your homework?â
âNolan Sawyer, right?â
âItâs just two people with the same name.â I wave my hand airily. âLike when you were in kindergarten and there were, like, four Madison Smiths in . . .â
She turns her tablet around. Itâs on Nolanâs Wikipedia page, which includes a high-res candid of him scowling down at a chessboard. As much as Iâd love to deny it, he is the same guy who just raided our meat loaf stash.
I blink.
I blink again.
I blink once more and make another split- second decision: lie again. Darcyâs twelve. I can talk myself out of this.
I gasp dramatically. âNo ! Are you serious?â I am a terrible actress. Iâm talking elementary school play level. âHe never mentioned. Iâll have to ask him next time we . . .â
I fall quiet, because Darcy has navigated to a new page. It has a picture of two people: Nolan, looming darkly on one side of the board, shakes the hand of a blond girl wearing a flannel top that looks just like mine. Neither smiles or speaks, but theyâre holding each otherâs eyes in a way that seems almost intimate, andâ
My eyes fall on the title of the page:
âFuck.â
âThereâs a whole article about you.â
âFuck.â
âAnd pictures.â
âFuck.â
âAnd even a video, though I canât make it work. I think popups are blocked?â
âFuck fuck .â Of course this shitâs online. The press was everywhereâ what did I think they were going to do with the footage, scrapbook it? âFuck.â
âYou should stop swearing in front of twelve- year- olds. Mrs. Vitelli says that my brainâs still all squishy. Iâll probably end up in juvie if you swear just once more.â
âHere goes another promising young woman.â
I pluck the tablet from Darcyâs hands. The article is on ChessWorld.com. The header boasts .
I groan.
I toss the tablet onto the bed. My hands are shaking. âHow did you find this?â
Darcy shrugs. âI was doing homework.â
âHomework.â
âItâs genealogy week. Iâm supposed to write about my paternal great- grandparents, and itâs not like I can ask you or Mom, since you both go in to covert operation mode whenever I mention Dad, so I googled Archie Greenleaf, and Iâm sorry if Iâ â Darcyâs voice is high pitched, and she looks about to cry. My heart twists.
âOkayâ itâs okay! You didnât do anything wrong, honey. I swear Iâm not mad. And . . .â Sheâs right that we donât really discuss Dad, or what happened to him. Maybe we should? Maybe should be talking about Dad to her? Not Momâ it would be painful for her. It would be my responsibility.
Itâs only fair, considering that itâs my fault in the first place heâs not around anymore.
I kneel in front of her and take her hand in mine. âDo you want to talk about Dad?â
âNot now.â The relief that sweeps over me is embarrassing. âIâd like to know what a Zugzwang fellow is, though.â
Walked right into that one. âItâs a . . . a job. I am being paid to learn about chess. For one year.â
âAnd the senior center?â Her eyes widen. âAnd the ?â
âThere are noâ well, there pigeons, plenty, more than we need. But no senior center.â
âDo Mom and Sabrina know? Did you lie just to me?â
âNo.â I shake my head energetically. âNo one knows.â
She seems relieved. For a split second. âSo youâre playing chess for money?â
âYes.â
âIsnât that like gambling?â
âWhat?â
âAnd isnât gambling illegal?â
âIâ â
âIs that why youâre lying? Because youâre working for the gambling mob?â
âItâs gambling, Darcy. Itâs a sport.â I notice her raised eyebrow. She knows my athletic prowess. âKind of.â
âWhy donât you want us to know, then?â
âThere are . . . things you might not remember, because you were very young when they happened, butâ â
âBecause Dad used to play chess.â
I sigh. âYes. Partially. I just want to protect you guys from something that could hurt you.â
âIâm not fragile orâ â
âBut I am. And so is Sabrinaâ even though sheâs in her rebellious phase and would deny it. And Mom . . . Many painful things happened, Darcy. But weâre happy now.â
âSabrinaâs mostly just sullen.â
I chuckle. âTrue. I just want to take care of all of you.â
âAnd yet, you brought the Kingkiller into our house.â
âHow do you even know aboutâ â
âThe Wikipedia entry was very thorough. Did you know that he once played Jeff Bezos for charity? He beat him in twenty seconds, then asked if the water bottle next to the chessboard was for peeing.â
âA true hero of the working class. Darcyâ â
âAlso, thereâs tons of fanfiction on AO3, mostly of him making out with some Emil Kareem guy, butâ â
âWhat? How do you know what fanfiction is?â
âI read it all the time.â
âExcuse me?â
âChill. The PG-13 stuff.â
âPG means parental guidance, which means that a parentâ meâ should be there with you.â
She cocks her head. âYou are aware that youâre not my parent, right?â
I take a deep breath. âListen, Darcy, the reason I was keeping a secretâ â
âOh my God. Mal, now itâs secret!â All of a sudden, she looks seriously pumped up.
âNo. No, I donât want you keeping secrets from Momâ â
âI donât mind,â she says quickly. âI want to!â
âDarcy, you were all about us telling each other everything at dinner. Iâll explain to Momâ â
â
said it might be painful to her. And I want to have a secret with you. Something just !â
I study her hopeful, shining eyes, wondering if sheâs been feeling isolated. Iâm in NYC a lot, after all. Itâs not like Sabrina can be coaxed away from her phone, and Mom is too low- energy to spend much time with her. Plus, telling the truth would open a whole silo of worms. And Iâm reasonably confident that neither Mom nor Sabrina will be looking me up on the internet.
âOkay,â I say. Itâs a terrible idea, but Darcy fist- pumps. Then her face takes on a calculated expression.
âBut itâll cost you.â
My eyes narrow. âReally? Are you going to blackmail me?â
âI just think that my morning oatmeal could use one more tablespoon of Nutella. Half? A teaspoon?
â
I shake my head and go in for a hug.
I DONâT SEE NOLAN AGAIN.
Not like, ever. But not for weeks, and I donât hear about him, either, with the exception of a Tuesday afternoon when he trends on chess Twitter, after forgetting about a virtual tournament and showing up on camera five minutes late while still pulling a Henley over his chest (#KingkillerSoHot). The fact that I notice his absence from my life has me slightly rattled. I might be even rattled, but itâs the busiest Iâve ever been.
After Philly Open, Defne changes my routine. She schedules more time for me with the GMs (including Oz, who it) to focus on specific weaknesses in my play. She also has me play online chess to increase my rating, and daily matches with Zugzwangâs patrons. âIt suits you betterâ learning by doing,â she tells me.
Sheâs right. My game improves quickly, positions and strategies easy at my fingertips. âWhoâd have guessed that deliberately cultivating a natural talent would lead to the betterment of said talent,â Oz says tartly. In retaliation, I chew an entire bag of kettle chips at my desk.
A huge chunk of my time is spent replaying old games. âThanks for buying the creamer I asked for,â Sabrina huffs after I spend a hazy hour drifting through the grocery store aisles, wondering if Salov could have unpinned his knight in â95. Iâm training so much, I canât seem to turn it off, not even in my sleep. Chess positions are taking over the back of my head, and after nights spent tossing and turning to Karpovâs end games, I almost welcome fleeting dreams of dark, deep- set eyes glaring at me in frustration.
In the last week of September the morning air gets chilly, and I break out my favorite blue scarf, the one Easton made for me during her short- lived knitting phase.
I snap a selfie and send it to her, scowling when her only response is a lazy heart emoji. I realize that we havenât talked in over a week, and I scowl harder when she doesnât reply to my How have things been? When my phone pings an hour later, I feel a burst of hope, but itâs just Hasan, asking if Iâd like to meet up over the weekend.
Iâm not sure why, but I leave him on read.
For the first time, when I walk into the office, Oz is not at his desk.
âHeâs at a tournament,â Defne explains.
I nearly pout. âWhy didnât get to go?â
âBecause your rating is at the core of the earth. Most tournaments are either invitation- only or have strict access criteria.â
I pout.
âYouâre in an unprecedented situation, Mal. Most players grow in the game, and their ratings grow with them. But even if you do nothing but win at chess and eat tuna straight from the can, it will still take you a couple of years to get to a point when your rating represents your actual skills.â She pats my shoulders. âI did sign you up for the Nashville Open in mid- October. Prize is five thousand, but youâre going to winâ top players donât show up for that.â She bites her lower lip, hesitating. âIâve been approached with another opportunity, but . . .â
âWhat opportunity?â
She chews on her lip. âYou know the Chess Olympics?â
I blink. âThatâs not really a thing, is it?â
âOf course it is.â
âLetâs say that I believe you. What is it?â
âJust a team tournament. Not Olympics, but a similar format: one team per nation, four players per team. Five days. This year itâs in Toronto, the first week of Novemberâ do you have a passport?â I nod. âEmil called and asked ifâ â
âEmil? Kareem?â
âYup. The problem is, the Pasternak Invitational is right after, in Moscow, and thatâs a way more prestigious tournament.â
âMore prestigious than the Olympics.â Seems fake.
âWell, you know how pro chess is.â Defne must remember that I do not, in fact, know, because she continues, âIn the end, itâs all about the money. The Pasternak has ridiculous prizes, unlike the Olympics, and most pros and Super GMs donât want to tire themselves for nothing. Well, not . There a trophy. It looks nice, kind of like a cup. I guess you could eat cereal in it? Soup? Salads, if you donât mind your fork clinking against the metalâ â
âWhoâs on the US team besides Emil?â
âNot sure.â She sounds a little cagey. âMaybe Tanu Goel?â
âDo you want me to go?â
âI . . .â She scratches the back of her head, and her sleeve slides backward, revealing her chessboard tattoo. I study the positions while she seems to reach a decision. White is attacking with the rook, and Black is two pawns down. âIt would be a great opportunity for you to raise your rating, gain expertise, network.â She smiles. For the first time in this conversation. âIâd love to send you, if you can swing it time- wise.â
A few hours later I sit at the dinner table with my family, munching on the tail of a tyrannosaurus chicken nugget and mentioning as casually as I can muster, âThe senior center asked me to accompany the residents on a trip.â
âOh.â Mom looks up from her plate. âWhere to?â
âToronto. Five days, in November.â I can feel Darcyâs eyes burning through me. Having a crucial secret with a naturally chatty twelve- year- old is not all itâs cracked up to be. âTheyâd pay me time and a half. And itâd be cool to see Canada. I need to let them know by tomorrowâ â
âWait.â Sabrina sets her phone on the table. Forcefully. âYouâre going to party in Toronto and leave us on our own? For real?â
I blink, taken aback by the mix of panic and anger in her voice. âI was justâ â
âWhat if Goliath has a vet emergency? What if Darcy sticks a Monopoly token up her nose and needs to be taken to urgent care? What if I need a ride to a derby meetâ am I supposed to hitchhike?â
âIâd arrange everything beforehand,â I start just as Darcy says, âI havenât stuck anything up my nose since I was five!â and Mom points out, â
will still be around, Sabrina.â
âDarcyâs an idiot, and idiots are unpredictable, Mal. And thatâs the point of emergenciesâ you prepare for them. What if Mom has a flare-up? Whoâs going to take care of her? How can youâ â
âSabrina.â Momâs voice, usually gentle, cuts like a whip. âApologize to your sisters.â
âI didnât say anything thatâs not trueâ â
Sheâs gone in a flurry of screeching chairs and stomping feet. The room falls silent, and seconds later a door down the hallway slams into its frame.
Mom closes her eyes for exactly three breaths. Then says, âMallory, of course you should go. Weâll be fine.â
I shake my head. Deep down, I know Sabrina is right. After all, Iâm the one who keeps reminding her how fragile Momâs health is. I shouldnât be surprised if sheâs freaking out at the idea of me leaving. âNo. Honestlyâ â
âMallory.â Mom covers my hand with hers. Itâs still clutching the fork, the half- eaten nugget speared at its end. âI am asking you to please tell your boss that youâre going, okay?â
I nod. Then churn it over the entire night, sleepless, bitter, Sabrinaâs words a hateful ring in my ears. I am angry. Guilty. Furious. Sad.
. Does she not understand the sacrifices Iâve made for the family? Does she think that I to stop going to school? Does she think that I it, knowing that in four years Easton will have a degree and a career and Iâll be stuck in some minimum-wage dead-end job? That weâll grow further and further apart as time goes on, as I fall behind, forgotten? Screw Sabrina, honestly.
, that obnoxious little voice reminds me.
I wake up in the morning eager to apologize to Sabrina for . . . I donât know. Ruining her life four years ago, maybe? Her room, though, is empty.
âMcKenzieâs momâs driving her to school,â Darcy explains. âFor someone whose biggest fear is not having a ride to the ER, Sabrina the Teenage Bitch is pretty crafty at finding one on short notice.â
âFirst of all, we do use that word.â I smile and step closer, pushing her bangs back. Itâs like looking into a freckled, rejuvenating Snapchat filter. âSecondly, you know Sabrina loves you, right? She doesnât really think that youâre an idiot.â
âI believe that she loves me thinks that Iâm an idiot. Because is an idiot.â She gives me an appraising look. âBy the way, I donât think youâre egotistical, Mal. I mean, you skimp on the Nutella and donât show Timothée Chalamet the admiration thatâs due him, and you are, objectively, a liar. But I donât think youâre egotistical.â I feel a lump swell in my throat. Until Darcy frowns. âThough Iâm not one hundred percent sure I have the correct definition of .â
A couple of hours later Iâm in Defneâs office, which is a bit like its owner: colorful, happy, and full of knickknacks that should not go well together but somehow do.
âGood morning!â She grins from her desk. âDid you steal Delroyâs rainbow bagel? Heâs upset.â
âNope. Just got here.â
âOh. How can I help you then?â
I clear my throat. Well, here goes. âCould you tell Emil that Iâd love to do the Olympics?â